Prosecutors in Georgia say they are investigating allegations of election fraud

By Felix Light

TBILISI (Reuters) -State prosecutors in Georgia said on Wednesday they had launched an investigation into opposition allegations of possible falsification at a weekend parliamentary election which the ruling Georgian Dream was declared to have won.

Official results gave Georgian Dream, a party which has deepened ties with Russia, 54% of the vote and a clear majority in parliament after Saturday’s vote. But opposition politicians have said they will boycott the chamber in protest at a result they said was illegitimate.

The Prosecutor’s Office said in a statement it had summoned Georgian President Salome Zourabichvili, a government critic who has repeatedly said the vote count was falsified but has not provided evidence of that, to testify on Thursday.

Zourabichvili and other opposition figures had cast the vote as a pivotal moment in Georgian history, where the country was choosing between European Union integration with the opposition, or a continuing drift towards Russia under Georgian Dream.

Georgia has no diplomatic relations with Russia and Georgian Dream, which says it does want the South Caucasus country to one day join the EU, says it does not want the nation to be dragged into another conflict with Moscow which won a short war against it in 2008.

The Prosecutor’s Office said is probe was being opened at the request of Georgia’s electoral commission, which has said that the vote was free and fair.

Georgian media on Tuesday reported that the electoral commission had called for an investigation into what it called “baseless criticism” of the election.

Zourabichvili told Reuters on Monday that Georgian Dream had used a Russian “methodology” to falsify the election result, citing two exit polls which had pointed to an opposition victory.

Election observers, including the 57-nation Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) have said that the vote was marked by incidents of voter intimidation, bribery and ballot-stuffing that could have impacted the result, but stopped short of calling it rigged.

The Kremlin has denied interference allegations and accused the West of trying to unduly influence the outcome of the vote.

(Reporting by Felix Light; Editing by Andrew Osborn)

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